When Ceda Verbakel moved from Melbourne to Toronto three years ago, she knew nothing about the maker community. At the time, the sex-ed teacher considered herself crafty – she enjoyed sewing – however like many of us, believed that maker spaces were reserved for tech geeks, hackers, engineers and modern machinists. But then, a friend who was involved in Maker Faire in the U.S. changed her mind.

“She told me they wanted to do one in Toronto and asked me to help out. I was reluctant at first, but then she asked me to organize the party, and I thought, ‘Well, I can probably organize a party,’” says Verbakel. She got on board and volunteered at Toronto’s first official Maker Festival last year.

This year, the festival has expanded to a month-long event from June 15 to July 17. Nearly 100 workshops, speaking events and meetups will be taking over maker spaces, art studios and community hubs across the city. Highlights include beginner’s knitting and crocheting classes, glassblowing workshops, a chance to learn film photography and how to develop black and white film, jewellery-making and book-binding workshops, a coding day and a tech social night.

The entire festival culminates in a maker extravaganza at the Reference Library on July 9 and 10. The free, all-ages event gives makers a chance to showcase their creative projects and attracts more than 10,000 attendees.

“There’s everything from a family who happens to just make things together and have weird robots they want to show everyone, to small makers who sell things like jewellery,” Verbakel explains. “A lot of it is around technology and different things people are doing in the city.”

To kick off Maker Festival, a launch party will be held at the Centre for Social Innovation (192 Spadina) on June 15 from 6:30 to 10 pm. The party gives attendees a chance to check out Toronto’s newest maker space, STEAMLabs, which is located in the back of the CSI building.

STEAMLabs opened in January and unlike some maker spaces that specialize in only one type of making, such as tech or woodworking, it offers a variety of tools. Inside the large creative hub, makers have access to industrial wood and laser cutters, 3D printers, sewing machines, a wood shop, computers and more. The Toronto Tool Library, which loans tools from several branches, also has an express outpost at STEAMLabs.

“Our mandate is that these machines are for people who don’t necessarily know how to use them – they’re for people who want to learn,” says Verbakel, who is also the director of culture at STEAMLabs. “We’re really excited about having all kinds of people in here.”

That includes women. There are three females on STEAMLabs’s team including Marianne Mader, who cofounded the space with Andy Forest, and many of the organization’s volunteers are women.

“Andy is very interested in making sure this doesn’t become a ‘dude club.’ We love dudes, but we don’t want it to be all dudes,” Verbakel explains. “We have noticed that a lot of women are coming into the space, and in our last round of Maker Bootcamp – a 10-week intensive for beginners where we teach them how to use all the tools – it was all women.”

Young makers are also welcome at STEAMLabs, and Verbakel says that an emphasis on STEM (an acronym for science, technology, engineering and math) education in schools has persuaded many families to seek out more hands-on experiences. Kids are also welcome to use the tools as long as they are supervised.

In Toronto, the maker community is large and growing, with many adults looking to get reacquainted with their creative sides. Some people are eventually able to turn the things they make into businesses. For example, at STEAMLabs, one maker has been creating prototypes for a sports game he invented and received Kickstarter funding for; another maker uses the 3D printers at the new maker space to make custom grills.

“His customers, they come in the back, he takes a mould of their teeth and then he melts gold into moulds,” Verbakel adds. “That speaks to being a producer rather than a consumer.”

Most makers, however, never expect to earn a profit from their projects, and that’s okay. They do it for the experience of building something with their hands, exercising their creativity and seeing how far they can take the convergence of technology and individual energy. That, perhaps, is the greatest satisfaction of all.

“Having that permission to spend your time not working, not exercising, but making is therapeutic in a way,” Verbakel says. “We were once bakers and candlestick makers, and now we do a lot of consuming. We do a lot of working and selling other people’s shit, but in this community, I get this sense that it’s people being genuinely interested in something and then following through – building it, or tinkering, or talking to a friend about it and making some weird art project. It’s one kind of breeding ground for human flourishing.”

Tickets to the Maker Fest launch party are $12 online and $15 at the door. All proceeds go to support Maker Festival, which is entirely volunteer run. Find details for all Maker Fest events here.

Tags

Comments (1)

wood

Download over 16,000 WOODWORKING PLANS at here tiny.cc/woodboat Woodworking guide offers anyone of any skill level the ability to build amazing projects. The guide is extra helpful because it offers more detailed explanations, videos and blueprints then your typical woodworker magazine .Hope it will help you next time !